Stars:
Omar Sharif, Julie Christie, Geraldine ChaplinStoryline
During the Russian Revolution, Yuri Zhivago, is a young doctor who has been raised by his aunt and uncle following his father's suicide. Yuri falls in love with beautiful Lara Guishar, who has been having an affair with her mother's lover, Victor Komarovsky, an unscrupulous businessman. Yuri, however, ends up marrying his cousin, Tonya. But when he and Lara meet again years later, the spark of love reignites.User Reviews
David Lean's Doctor
Zhivago is a fine and stirring epic which has stood the test of time.
one baseless criticism which pops up again and again dwells on.....
Julie Christie's sixties bangs!! To me they were cinematic shorthand for
"schoolgirl," which her character was at the outset of the plot. For
those hung up on hair, the really noticeable sixties styles in this film
can be seen elsewhere: Early in the film, as Zhivago is conferring with
his professor at medical school, we see a group of female medical
students in the background with teased bouffants. Later, at a Christmas
party many of the female extras are adorned with the same anachronistic
coiffure (this is supposed to be 1912 Moscow!). As to bangs, one can
find, for instance, photos of the Russian poet Anna Akhmatova from
around the same period with very obvious "sixties" bangs. Bangs have
been around to one degree or another, whether in vogue or not, since
there has been hair. Case closed.
Another worthless criticism:
It's too slow, too long. Phooey. Some movies have to be slow and long to
tell a big, detailed story.
If one is going to criticize this
film, I suggest the following: 1. Screenwriter Robert Bolt's kneading of
the characters' lives into the progression of the Russian revolution is
sometimes at odds with actual chronology, so that anyone familiar with
this period cringes from time to time. In one scene, in order to
identify for the viewer the historical point that has been reached, a
character blurts out (I paraphrase, but only very slightly): "Lenin is
in Moscow! Civil war has started!" Neither could have been true at that
moment in the narrative. Bolt could have polished his distillation of
the novel, but who, apart from direct participants, can ever know why
such gaffes occur in high-pressure multi-million-dollar productions? 2.
This is yet another movie about a writer, in this case a beloved but
politically controversial poet, not a word of whose poetry is revealed
to the audience (except for the title of one poem, "Lara," after the
woman he loves). Other major movies, including Julia (1977) and Wonder
Boys (2000) also commit this offense. Ironically, one exception is the
campy and rather dreary Isn't She Great (2000), about trash novelist
Jacqueline Susann, which actually explores the act of writing! 3. The
physical reproduction of the era is uneven. Some moments are too clean.
one example: When Zhivago slides open the door of the ostensibly
foul-smelling box car in which he and his family have been traveling for
weeks packed alongside filthy, probably lice-ridden passengers, he
looks too healthy, scrubbed and well rested. This and other moments
stand out because they occur in the context of innumerable convincing
depictions such as mud-filled wartime trenches, a looted and vandalized
city mansion, or a half-frozen refugee tramping stiffly over the ice of a
frozen lake. 4. It is said that Russian viewers laugh at the
onion-domed house where the lovers hide from the Bolsheviks. Russian
churches have onion domes, they say, but not houses. Granted. But I'd
like to think that the person who built this particular house was an
eccentric and got away with the concept because the house was in an
isolated rural area away from the prying eyes of the "architecture
police."
In any case, the emotional truths underlying the
occasional inadequate or wrongheaded representations register
powerfully. The grand-scale perspective gives a sense of the tumult of
the times; vivid and memorable casting choices keep us fascinated with
the characters and concentrated upon them; you feel the terrible losses
people suffered when history so rudely pulled the rug out from under
them; you are reminded of the pitiless cruelty of war and the depths to
which people in its grip can descend; and how despite the tragedies of
our history, we go on no matter what. David Lean had a great gift for
injecting bold images at just the right moment. And he had the same gift
for the perfectly timed sound effect, often occurring at an edit point.
At Zhivago's end one feels a tremendous sense of sadness and loss but
hope for the future. Considering the international political climate of
the time of its release, it treats the Russian Revolution with enough
detachment to illuminate both sides of the political divide. In other
words, it doesn't propagandize for either side.
This was the
first major Hollywood treatment of the Russian Revolution, was still
running in theatres around the world two and three years after its
initial release, despite dismissals from most of the major film critics
of the time. Its popularity came from word of mouth, i.e., from the
public's genuine love of the story and its striking, technically expert
presentation. Interestingly, Zhivago as a box office blockbuster was
second only to The Sound of Music, released the same year. Both films
told the story of individuals faced with historically recent Old World
political upheavals (communism/fascism). Furthermore, the soundtrack
album of each film took on a life of its own, selling millions of
copies. And why not also add that central to the success of each film
was an English actress named Julie (Christie as Lara/Andrews as Maria).
How many times have you heard of or personally known a woman under 40
with the previously uncommon name of Lara? Guess why that name became
popular in the 60's and afterward?
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